"Phantom Tollbooth" creators return with "The Odious Ogre"
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Barring any last-second entries by J.K. Rowling, Suzanne Collins's 鈥淢ockingjay鈥 will likely turn out to be the biggest young adult book of the year. But for lovers of classic children's literature, this month brought an even better reason to celebrate: a new book by Norton Juster and Jules Feiffer.
How big a deal is this? This is better than Harry Potter 8 would be. This is like Bill Watterson deciding that he really missed being a cartoonist after all, causing Calvin & Hobbes fans to take to their sleds with joy. This is like George Lucas realizing that one trilogy wasn't enough to contain the Skywalker saga and鈥 oh, wait.
For those of you wondering how a tollbooth could possibly be beloved (What's next, "The Adorable Root Canal"?), allow me to explain. Roughly 50 years ago, Juster, apparently in a fit of procrastination, wrote 鈥淭he Phantom Tollbooth,鈥 about a bored boy named Milo and a Watchdog named Tock. It combines the kind of lunatic wordplay not often found outside 鈥Alice's Adventures in Wonderland鈥 with a gentle push to get out there and engage with life. Getting to read your child 鈥淭he Phantom Tollbooth鈥 is one of the great pleasures of parenthood.
Juster's downstairs neighbor was Feiffer, and, as Juster tells , he would take Feiffer the chapters to illustrate as he finished them. The result is one of those titles 鈥 like 鈥淭he Wind in the Willows,鈥 鈥The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,鈥 and 鈥To Kill a Mockingbird 鈥 that make you feel good just to say the name.
The author and illustrator, not being ones to let the grass grow beneath them, have decided that five decades is long enough to wait for another collaboration.
As NPR's Liane Hansen asked Juster and Feiffer: 鈥淲hat took you so long?鈥
Juster tells her he's been working on 鈥淭he Odious Ogre鈥 off and on for more than 30 years. The picture book isn't a sequel or an authorized affair ginned up to prolong the copyrights on Milo and Tock. It's a new work, about a really big, really cranky guy and the girl who refuses to be scared of him. (And no, he isn't named Shrek.)
Any plans for more collaborations?
鈥淣orton's doing a lot push-ups, I'm on a diet, and who knows?鈥 the octogenarian Feiffer tells Hansen.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm off to the bookstore.
Yvonne Zipp regularly reviews children's fiction for the Monitor.